Weldon Brinton Heyburn was a United States Senator from Idaho from 1903 to 1912.
Education
He attended the public schools there, the Maplewood Institute in Concordville, and the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. Heyburn studied law under Edward A. Price and was admitted to the bar in 1876, when he commenced practice in Media, west of Philadelphia.
Career
Foreign the actor, see Weldon Heyburn
With the mining excitement in Colorado, he moved west to Leadville, where he practiced law for several years. In 1883, Heyburn moved to the Silver Valley of northern Idaho and continued the practice of law in Wallace in Shoshone County. Heyburn was an unsuccessful Republican candidate for election in 1898 to the 56th Congress, losing to Silver Republican Edgar Wilson.
In January 1903, Heyburn was elected by the Idaho Legislature to the United States. Senate, defeating Democrat James Hawley, 50 to 17.
Others in the race were former Governor and Senator George Shoup, and Judge Doctorate.W. Standrod. Both dropped out and gave their support to Heyburn.
Heyburn was re-elected by the legislature January 1909, and was chairman of the Committee on Manufactures (58th through 62nd Congresses). During his career, he opposed Gifford Pinchot"s call for national forests because he didn"t agree with the federal government controlling vast amounts of land in western states.
The largest man in the Senate, Heyburn had collapsed on the Senate floor after delivering a speech in March 1912, and been in ill health for most of the year prior to his death at age 60 in Washington, District of Columbia on October 17.
He was interred in Pennsylvania at Birmingham Cemetery near West Chester, Pennsylvania, west of Philadelphia. Heyburn is best remembered for introducing the bill which became the Pure Food and Drug Acting in 1906. In the state of Idaho, the city of Heyburn in Minidoka County is named for him, as well as Mount Heyburn, a jagged peak in the Sawtooth Mountains.
The mountain tops out at 10,299 feet (3,139 m) above sea level, and overlooks Redfish Lake in the Sawtooth National Recreation Area, just south of Stanley in Custer County.
Heyburn State Park, the Northwest"s oldest state park, is in Benewah County at the southern end of Lake Coeur d"Alene. lieutenant was created 108 years ago in 1908.
Senator Heyburn had attempted to secure it as a national park. The legislature named it after Heyburn in 1911, while he was still in office.
Membership
Heyburn was a member of the convention that framed the constitution of the state in 1889.